WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 16, 2013
10/13
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think when the pioneers started when you take people like ted fort smith or the departments at kkr or steve schwartzman they didn't want to come in and flip something every two or three years for their fees. they bought a company and ted i had many conversations with him about this. they bought a company because they felt passionate and they would hold it long-term and nurture it and be involved, what has happened with the later generations they just want to flip companies for their fees and management can't sustain that. >> rose: you are also frank about your personal life here. >> yes. >> where does that come from? and basically, i think too many people surprisingly are open about your life. >> well you grow up in an alcoholic home it is all about keeping secrets and it is those secrets that keep you sick. you can't tell anybody the truth and i thought if i am going to write a book i am not going to sugarcoat it and tell the truth and it felt great to tell the truth. because -- >> rose: what truth did you want to tell beyond that? the alcoholic mother? what truths did you want to tell? >>
think when the pioneers started when you take people like ted fort smith or the departments at kkr or steve schwartzman they didn't want to come in and flip something every two or three years for their fees. they bought a company and ted i had many conversations with him about this. they bought a company because they felt passionate and they would hold it long-term and nurture it and be involved, what has happened with the later generations they just want to flip companies for their fees and...
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May 25, 2013
05/13
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KQED
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steve jobs felt like his most important contribution was not the iphone or ipad. it was apple. >> sure. >> rose: he built apple, and that is what warren buffet, berkshire hathaway is his work of art. that's the way people feel. it's acrattive thing in which they give everything they have and try to bring people they care about and put them on a mission. and the mission is let's do something that brings all of us real income. if you can find that for me, you're halfway there. and the tragedy is, too few of us have an opportunity to do that. and don't have the kind of exhilaration that winning and losing brings you if i think if you talk to bill gates, they're going to give their money away. what they're doing is tremendous. i just did a profile on "60 minutes" with bill, the fact that he thinks he had eradicate polio is bigger than any software he sold a gazillions. >> people giving all their time and money and effort to do good things. at that point you're like money is the modern day report card, but once you've got that age let's go on. >> rose: there is this. w
steve jobs felt like his most important contribution was not the iphone or ipad. it was apple. >> sure. >> rose: he built apple, and that is what warren buffet, berkshire hathaway is his work of art. that's the way people feel. it's acrattive thing in which they give everything they have and try to bring people they care about and put them on a mission. and the mission is let's do something that brings all of us real income. if you can find that for me, you're halfway there. and the...
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Nov 1, 2013
11/13
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WMPT
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details from abc's steve portnoy. >> reporter: an inside look into just how difficult it was to sign up in the first days of healthcare.gov. notes from war room sessions on october 2nd and 3rd, are an early catalog of glitches. documents released by the house oversight committee, suggest just six people successfully signed up for coverage on the first day of enrollment. and by the end of the second day, after millions tried to logon, only 248 people were said to have enrolled. the obama administration says he's numbers aren't official. in her testimony this week, health and human services secretary kathleen sebelius says the website's flaws make any early data unreliable. >> we do not have any reliable data around enrollment, which is why we haven't given it to date. >> reporter: her agency doesn't plan to issue its first report on enrollment figures until mid-november. but the first days overwhelmingly viewed as a disaster. a survey shows 80% of those polled have a negative impression of obama care implementation. just 14% say it's gone well, that the law has benefited them. but nea
details from abc's steve portnoy. >> reporter: an inside look into just how difficult it was to sign up in the first days of healthcare.gov. notes from war room sessions on october 2nd and 3rd, are an early catalog of glitches. documents released by the house oversight committee, suggest just six people successfully signed up for coverage on the first day of enrollment. and by the end of the second day, after millions tried to logon, only 248 people were said to have enrolled. the obama...
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May 3, 2013
05/13
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KRCB
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in this case it's steve cohen. >> rose: let me just nail this down. there's no question that he -- this is a concerted effort by the southern district of new york to go after steve cohen, that he is in person that they want and a lot of what they do is to find a case against him? for some reason, because they think whatever -- that there was a violation of law, they would say? >> i don't think the southern district would say at to you if we were sitting here right now. i don't think he'd say our goal is to get -- >> rose: would he think that? >> i don't think they would say it but it seems clear from the evidence if you look at another guy who was recently indicted, another trader recently indicted i don't think the government would have spent the resources going after this guy if it weren't for the fact that he worked at s.a.c. it's too much pointing there and too many leaks, frankly, to other media outlets about the government's investigation and where it's going. you have leaks that a cooperating witness was saying that he was pressured to develop
in this case it's steve cohen. >> rose: let me just nail this down. there's no question that he -- this is a concerted effort by the southern district of new york to go after steve cohen, that he is in person that they want and a lot of what they do is to find a case against him? for some reason, because they think whatever -- that there was a violation of law, they would say? >> i don't think the southern district would say at to you if we were sitting here right now. i don't think...
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Dec 24, 2013
12/13
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>> joining me now, for the movie, steve carell, david koechner, paul rudd and will ferr el. i'm pleased to have them here's table. here we are watching the trailer and you guys are still laughing. >> it's ridiculous. ron is ridiculous. >> it is such a good idea, why did it take so long. >> these guys were really stu been. >> hard to get ahold of. >> had other jobs. >> had other jobs. >> i wanted nothing to do with it. >> you were into drama by now, aren't you. >> comedy prepared you for the big role. >> i have a pretense about me now.s and if you dare stick my toe back into that world -- >> the germ filled pool. >> exactly. >> gives you schieffers. >> i mean, you know, it's no comedy, so truly, now did you have to be convinced that you didn't want to be just another sequel? >> well, it's-- i mean you know, of the movies that i've done with adam mckay, cowriter and our director. >> was supposed to be here. >> had something else happen. we just never thought about ever doing sequells. we were just always on to the next story and we were more excited about that. anchorman thoug
>> joining me now, for the movie, steve carell, david koechner, paul rudd and will ferr el. i'm pleased to have them here's table. here we are watching the trailer and you guys are still laughing. >> it's ridiculous. ron is ridiculous. >> it is such a good idea, why did it take so long. >> these guys were really stu been. >> hard to get ahold of. >> had other jobs. >> had other jobs. >> i wanted nothing to do with it. >> you were into drama...
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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WMPT
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steve paul.... ho was receenly diagnosed wiih lou gehrig's diseass... won the ccntest..he described his peerect funeral as a cllse-knit affairrwwth relatives and frienns... llaghing and telllng storiee about he past. 1::2 ..paul says: "hopeffllyyi wwn't hhve to uue this giit or a number oo years. but i know, whenevvr it happens, ittwill bb too soon for me." the team says this contest ithh ten thousand ddllar prize is meant to help cellbbre life... not lamorize death.. there's just no orrs... there's just no wordd... but e'll tty. coming up.. the story bbhiin thh awkward picture of a kangaroo. [ male announcer ] if paula ebert had her way, she would help her child. deoxyribonucleic acid. he knew that. [ male announcer ] with everything. go! goooo! no. no no no no no. mommy's here. [ male announcer ] but that kind of love is...frowned upon. so instead she gives him capri sun. so he gets more of what he needs without all the "her" he doesn't think he needs. capri sun. with absolutely no artificial preservatives. this photo... that's causing quute a stir in
steve paul.... ho was receenly diagnosed wiih lou gehrig's diseass... won the ccntest..he described his peerect funeral as a cllse-knit affairrwwth relatives and frienns... llaghing and telllng storiee about he past. 1::2 ..paul says: "hopeffllyyi wwn't hhve to uue this giit or a number oo years. but i know, whenevvr it happens, ittwill bb too soon for me." the team says this contest ithh ten thousand ddllar prize is meant to help cellbbre life... not lamorize death.. there's just no...
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May 27, 2013
05/13
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KTVU
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i use natural sweetener like steve yeah. it's natural. that sweetens stuff without any spike in insulin and honey. >> truvia is good. >> anderson: great advice. thank you for being here. you can learn more about belly bad food in the belly fat cure. everyone in the audience will go home with a copy of jorge's book today. we will be right back. [applause] [♪] i create my unique looke new l'oreal super slim liner point 4 millimeter precision and control lets you go subtle or striking a pigment so rich my ultimate perfection the new super slim liner. from l'oreal paris ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] one day it will hit you. by replacing one sugared beverage a day with a bottle of nestle pure life water, you can cut 50,000 calories a year from his diet. choose the crisp, clean taste of america's #1 bottled water. nestle pure life. join the hydration movement. that's why we're donating to wounded warrior project. chat brawny® paper towels,ste ofwe admire strength.ed water. we stand strong with our nation's heroes and their families. pick up a
i use natural sweetener like steve yeah. it's natural. that sweetens stuff without any spike in insulin and honey. >> truvia is good. >> anderson: great advice. thank you for being here. you can learn more about belly bad food in the belly fat cure. everyone in the audience will go home with a copy of jorge's book today. we will be right back. [applause] [♪] i create my unique looke new l'oreal super slim liner point 4 millimeter precision and control lets you go subtle or...
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Feb 14, 2013
02/13
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folks like steve cap pass. i don't know if you know him? >> rose: i know him very well. >> talented guy, enormously respected. >> rose: retired from the c.i.a.. >> he has retired. they brought him back once before, we did. with people of that caliber available, i'm surprised you end up going with somebody like brennan. i just -- i come back to the proposition that it looks to me-- and speculative on my part, obviously, i'm not in the meetings-- that the president has made choices in part based on people who won't argue with him. who won't confront him. i think leon panetta's been a pretty good secretary. >> rose: drones. john brennan got into it at his confirmation. some say that this is an unusual situation. that the president has carried forward some of the baigs policies and that he's effectively waged war against terrorism using drones and that he should be commended for it. what say the former vice president? >> well, i like the drone program. when we came in, we had the drones as intelligence platforms but we didn't have any weapons o
folks like steve cap pass. i don't know if you know him? >> rose: i know him very well. >> talented guy, enormously respected. >> rose: retired from the c.i.a.. >> he has retired. they brought him back once before, we did. with people of that caliber available, i'm surprised you end up going with somebody like brennan. i just -- i come back to the proposition that it looks to me-- and speculative on my part, obviously, i'm not in the meetings-- that the president has...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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50
Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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WHUT
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steve martin is another. >> bill murray yeah. >> rose: was the first, the first guy. >> that's right. these are people that are, easy to admire. and really smart, really smart. and that's the other thing. i have been around all my life, really smart people. and it's a double-edged sword because it's great but it also makes you realize oh, jeez, i wish i was just 10%, maybe 15 more points on the iq test. but that's how you learn stuff, you know. and also to be able to make some of these people laugh is greatly satisfying. >> rose: in a previous conversation with me you said, you cannot understand unless you sit in that chair how you feel the necessity of getting a blaf every minute. >> that's right. that's interesting. i remember when we said that. see, i don't feel that way any more. i always felt like the show i was the central nervous system to the show. we have while my name is in the title of the show, i don't feel that need now. i feel like the presence of the guests can handle that just fine. somebody else can get a laugh, or we can go without a laugh. now i would prefer a laugh
steve martin is another. >> bill murray yeah. >> rose: was the first, the first guy. >> that's right. these are people that are, easy to admire. and really smart, really smart. and that's the other thing. i have been around all my life, really smart people. and it's a double-edged sword because it's great but it also makes you realize oh, jeez, i wish i was just 10%, maybe 15 more points on the iq test. but that's how you learn stuff, you know. and also to be able to make some...
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Mar 29, 2013
03/13
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KRCB
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. >> rose: steve jobs was a hero which understandable but why for you? >> it is the persistence, steve jobs, it's his persistence, tenacity thing. i think what happened is after he died there was an interview that came out from like the '70s. and de this quote and i can't remember the exact words but it was something along the lines of most peopleon't ask. it's just-- i thought about that, right. >> rose: most people don't ask. >> most people don't ask. most people don't ask things, so they don't even-- so let's say i done know are you a person you want to do an app. and you release the app and you want apple to feature it for example. 90 whatever the percent is won't e-mail someone at apple or try and get in touch say check out my app. but there is the small group of people that will. and the famous example with steve jobs is he phoned up the founder of hewlett packards in the phone book a when he was 15 and said i want to get an internship and he got the part it is that kind of idea of -- >> either david packard or-- i think it was bill hewitt. >> one
. >> rose: steve jobs was a hero which understandable but why for you? >> it is the persistence, steve jobs, it's his persistence, tenacity thing. i think what happened is after he died there was an interview that came out from like the '70s. and de this quote and i can't remember the exact words but it was something along the lines of most peopleon't ask. it's just-- i thought about that, right. >> rose: most people don't ask. >> most people don't ask. most people don't...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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KRCB
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their former boss, in 2009 google reportedly offered half a billion dollars for the company but after steve jobs called him personally to advise against the deal, stoppelman turned them down. it was the right move. since its i.p.o. in 2012, yelp's stock price has soared. it has a market capitalization of $3.2 billion. i'm pleased to have jeremy stoppelman at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thanks for having me. >> rose: oh, boy, i don't know to start. i mean, tell me what yep yelp does, that's where we can start. >> one way we can look at is it's worth of mouth amplified. we set out to create a new yellow pages, a better way for finding local businesses. so just like week media it's open to all comers. anyone can come on to the site, write a review of their favorite local business and all of that local knowledge can be searched over so you can find just about any business that you want. you know, here in the states just about any city and increasingly throughout the world you can find the best local businesses by turning to yelp. >> rose: did you do that finding that there was an
their former boss, in 2009 google reportedly offered half a billion dollars for the company but after steve jobs called him personally to advise against the deal, stoppelman turned them down. it was the right move. since its i.p.o. in 2012, yelp's stock price has soared. it has a market capitalization of $3.2 billion. i'm pleased to have jeremy stoppelman at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thanks for having me. >> rose: oh, boy, i don't know to start. i mean, tell me what...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jun 5, 2013
06/13
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WHUT
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and i said "yeah, if you could get steve king to write it." he said "i'm steve king's agent." so he called steve and he was interested enough to take a look and i flew down to florida and -- >> rose: there you go. so your reaction was "let's do it"? or did they say something to you that said "oh, yeah"? >> well, you know what? the guy that we're talking about the agent called me up and said "john mellencamp has an idea for a musical." and my reaction to that, zero. flat line. because a lot of people have a lot of ideas and they think, well stephen king would be perfect for this project. and he said "john would actually come down and talk to you because john was in south carolina" which is just a hop. "and i said to my wife "what do you think about this?" and she said "you know, his music reminds me of your stories why don't you go ahead and have a meeting with him?" my wife never says stuff like that. so john came, he told me the story and immediately the dials started to turn up and also at the same time that he was telling me the story he was tuning my guitar which i hadn't
and i said "yeah, if you could get steve king to write it." he said "i'm steve king's agent." so he called steve and he was interested enough to take a look and i flew down to florida and -- >> rose: there you go. so your reaction was "let's do it"? or did they say something to you that said "oh, yeah"? >> well, you know what? the guy that we're talking about the agent called me up and said "john mellencamp has an idea for a...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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. >> rose: and you write about steve jobs. >> actually before that, i did write about steve jobs. before that i went to detroit, for a year of battle hardening in 1979 as the automobile industry was collapsing. and it was-- and that was where, actually, i co-authored a book about the chrysler corporation and lee iacocca who was this larger-than-life figure who obviously was a house hold name 25, 30 years ago. and that was my introduction to mainstream journalism. and then i moved to california. first to los angeles. and where i found myself gravitating to northern california to do stories about all these little companies that nobody had heard of, you know, genentech was private. apple was just about public. microsoft was still private company. and i started writing about them and gradually got more interested. and then eventually wound up moving to san francisco with time. >> and what was steve jobs like then? >>. >> it's probably, steve is probably an example of like many, many people, of the truism that you never take the boy out of the man. and so many of the traits that people
. >> rose: and you write about steve jobs. >> actually before that, i did write about steve jobs. before that i went to detroit, for a year of battle hardening in 1979 as the automobile industry was collapsing. and it was-- and that was where, actually, i co-authored a book about the chrysler corporation and lee iacocca who was this larger-than-life figure who obviously was a house hold name 25, 30 years ago. and that was my introduction to mainstream journalism. and then i moved to...
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Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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KRCB
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bill gates or steve jobs? >> oh, both. both. >> both but for somewhat different reasons. with bill gates you'll remember him as a great philanthropist now in addition to everything else he's done but bill gates was utterly instrumental. let's put it this way, steve jobs commercialized and popularized -- he didn't invent it, but he popularize it had personal computer then he reinvented the way you use the personalal computer with the mac. but bill gates -- without bill gates and jobs himself said this at the joint inteiew that bill gas wuldn't have had the p.c. software industry >> he's the henry ford of it. >> he made it more popular. >> it's like henry ford, thomas edison. >> rose: along with andy grove. >> jeff bezos, larry page and sergei bryn, steve jobs, even larry ellisson, henry ford, thomas edison -- >> rose: i know, but the reason i asked the question is someone smart, i can't remember who, this is the reason i ask, said to me, look, a hundd yars fr now they're going to remember bill gates more than they remember steve jobs, i promise you because of what he's doi
bill gates or steve jobs? >> oh, both. both. >> both but for somewhat different reasons. with bill gates you'll remember him as a great philanthropist now in addition to everything else he's done but bill gates was utterly instrumental. let's put it this way, steve jobs commercialized and popularized -- he didn't invent it, but he popularize it had personal computer then he reinvented the way you use the personalal computer with the mac. but bill gates -- without bill gates and jobs...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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WHUT
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i think steve job's history with pixar had a lot to do with whey they are reluctant. his own thinking became aligned with the people who owned films their view is to keep things restricted in windows. so apple hasn't subscribed to the free flow of the web. >> rose: so meaning steve wanted to sell you what was in his library? >> no, meaning steve respected the traditions of hollywood of only selling things through stern carriers who have very specific rights. it's the whole notion that you see in the theaters for the first month and then it's in hotel rooms and airplanes for a month and then on t.v. >> rose: everybody says that that's going to move away from that. >> i don't know if it is or isn't. >> rose: well people like jeff say it will. >> well, great. but the reason it will move away is because -- >> rose: in other words we'll have one giant opening of movies >> i sure hope so. >> rose: it won't be here then there then there. >> in the meantime -- >> rose: around the world. >> the interesting thing is that young people no longer get a land line at home, they no l
i think steve job's history with pixar had a lot to do with whey they are reluctant. his own thinking became aligned with the people who owned films their view is to keep things restricted in windows. so apple hasn't subscribed to the free flow of the web. >> rose: so meaning steve wanted to sell you what was in his library? >> no, meaning steve respected the traditions of hollywood of only selling things through stern carriers who have very specific rights. it's the whole notion...
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Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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steve chen. and chet hurley, the three guys. >> rose: if you had to describe the one quality you all shared, what would it be? let's assume intelligence is given. >> um -- we all knew we wanted to start companies. we came to entrepreneurship from different parts in our lives but i think all of us were either starting this company and peter and elon and i were starting this company and everyone else knew that this was basically their last job. they were going to do their own thing next and this was training ground. the. >> rose: i'll just do this and then i'll do my own thing and i'll make money and do something else. >> i think that's what you think then but when you wake up after the pilot money part you kind of go "the only thing i want to do is more of this." >> rose: exactly! that's such an interesting process. paypal created you guys, sell it to ebay and it's a very successful acquisition for ebay and most of you left. there was like, boom, explosion out of there. >> uh-huh. >> rose: was the
steve chen. and chet hurley, the three guys. >> rose: if you had to describe the one quality you all shared, what would it be? let's assume intelligence is given. >> um -- we all knew we wanted to start companies. we came to entrepreneurship from different parts in our lives but i think all of us were either starting this company and peter and elon and i were starting this company and everyone else knew that this was basically their last job. they were going to do their own thing...
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Mar 5, 2013
03/13
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. >> i agree with steve rattner, obama's car czar, i agree with the president of the c.f.r., i agree with jeffrey saks. >> rose: who all believe? >> who all believe that we have a long-term debt problem and whether they believe that over the next two, three, four years we need to obsess over the deficit or not doesn't change the fact that we have a generational problem. >> hold on a second! let me talk. paul's been allowed to talk an awful lot. >> rose: fair enough. >> paul a k call it ad hominem attacks all he wants but what we believe is that what paul once believed and that is -- well, it's not even a matter of belief it's reality. we have a generational crisis. in 1933, 1934 when f.d.r. created social security, life expectancy was 62. you got your first check at 62. that's a pretty good deal. even a small government conservative liked that type of deal. we're growing -- we're living -- you know, if you can just stop from saying wow. >> sorry. i've stopped so many times. >> let me just finish -- >> i'm sorry, that was an involuntary reaction. >> you and al gore need to talk about
. >> i agree with steve rattner, obama's car czar, i agree with the president of the c.f.r., i agree with jeffrey saks. >> rose: who all believe? >> who all believe that we have a long-term debt problem and whether they believe that over the next two, three, four years we need to obsess over the deficit or not doesn't change the fact that we have a generational problem. >> hold on a second! let me talk. paul's been allowed to talk an awful lot. >> rose: fair...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 2, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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. >> rose: this is what the magazine said but.ould reasonabe described as britain's steve jobs given his unorthodox obsessed and sometimes bruising approach to making something beautiful. we'll talk about all those things, but did you think you were making something beautiful? >> i think that the encouragement i got from the airway part once they called -- >> rose: people wanted you fire. >> yes, exactly. one or two banners were up saying things. it was the combination and i knew the things it was doing was correct. so the board, the chairman and bobby in particular stood by me because they knew what was happening. by doing that, they knew we had something special in these young players back from scores. they all come to the first team roundabout the same time. when people were fascinated of today maybe they don't understand that those boys were the spell of the club. they created a fantastic spirit in manchester as it is today. >> rose: this is part of business for you. you went up there and they developed the taste test. what was the question. generally these things have a question
. >> rose: this is what the magazine said but.ould reasonabe described as britain's steve jobs given his unorthodox obsessed and sometimes bruising approach to making something beautiful. we'll talk about all those things, but did you think you were making something beautiful? >> i think that the encouragement i got from the airway part once they called -- >> rose: people wanted you fire. >> yes, exactly. one or two banners were up saying things. it was the combination...
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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you have just announced publicly the other day you had a wonderful stock option from steve jobs who was your friend and who you were on his board. you bought a television channel and rekristened it as the current tv and you just sold that and made a handsome profit. you sold to al jazeera and people take note of the fact that al jazeera is in part subsidized or sponsed by the qatar government. >> uh-huh. >> rose: did that cause you a moment of saying look f i do this, if i sell to them, even though i will make a handsome profit, people are going to say oh, i wish you had found a better buyer. >> well, i did extensive diligence on that whole question. of course i understand that critique which was then a potential critique, absolutely. but what the diligence showed very clearly is that al jazeera has longince esblished itself as an immensely respected news gathering network around the world. it's won the major journalism award in countries after country. it is respected as having integrity. on its climate reporting, for example, it's higher quality and far more expensive than any. u.s. n
you have just announced publicly the other day you had a wonderful stock option from steve jobs who was your friend and who you were on his board. you bought a television channel and rekristened it as the current tv and you just sold that and made a handsome profit. you sold to al jazeera and people take note of the fact that al jazeera is in part subsidized or sponsed by the qatar government. >> uh-huh. >> rose: did that cause you a moment of saying look f i do this, if i sell to...
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Oct 5, 2013
10/13
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WETA
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to door meeting every one of our hosts and we basically -- i like to say when you bought an iphone steve jobs didn't sleep on your couch but we did. >> rose: all the people that were engaged in renting their homes here in new york you'd go see every one of them? >> yes. and when we visited them we'd get new insights. >> rose: like? >> well, we'd hear all sorts of things that people desired to share their space on a service like ours, some things like simple payment system. an easy-to-use calendar, support for mobile devices. and so we would gather this feedback-- which was really tapping into a traditional industrial design process. >> rose: are most people doing this because they need extra cash or are they doing it because they want to meet people and want to have some kind of interesting experience? >> i thinkne of the things we used to talk about was we felt like money was the initial hook. it's the reason you might try this for the very first time. but the reason most hosts continue to do it is because of the amazing people they get to meet. the people they get to welcome to their h
to door meeting every one of our hosts and we basically -- i like to say when you bought an iphone steve jobs didn't sleep on your couch but we did. >> rose: all the people that were engaged in renting their homes here in new york you'd go see every one of them? >> yes. and when we visited them we'd get new insights. >> rose: like? >> well, we'd hear all sorts of things that people desired to share their space on a service like ours, some things like simple payment...
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. >> rose: the collaboration between the two of them is, clearly is between steve and tony, but also catherine and mark, i mean, mackerel informed that film by the sort of -- because he is a former reporter, what he went to find in terms of the experiences and then figured out how to make a movie out of those experiences in a driving narrative, you know, and they chose -- they had to change it after the assassination, after the killing of osama bin laden. >> yes, this he threw out the, out the earlier movie and started all over. >> rose: so tell me about ang lee and what you think of this movie. >> i admire ang lee greatly and i don't think i would have put it on the best film of the years myself but it is technically very invasive like pi and i think it was one of the few occasions in the past few years with the wave of 3-d films that it actually took me some place i wasn't expecting him to take it what he did with high definition and the different textures of movement of water on the screen, it is an incredible looking film. >> rose: tell me what it was you saw in the beast of the
. >> rose: the collaboration between the two of them is, clearly is between steve and tony, but also catherine and mark, i mean, mackerel informed that film by the sort of -- because he is a former reporter, what he went to find in terms of the experiences and then figured out how to make a movie out of those experiences in a driving narrative, you know, and they chose -- they had to change it after the assassination, after the killing of osama bin laden. >> yes, this he threw out...
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. >> in doing enemy, steve mcqueen was here who works with the same actors a number of times. is that something you like to do because he find somebody that somehow represents an you know --. >> i'm trapped. >> get me out of here. >> honestly, the beauty of cinema -- >> no but the butte -- beauty of cinema. >> no, no, i am deeply inspired by that man. and i think jake is a fall tan particular actor, seriously. i love the beauty of the rip in cinemament i love a team working, and working to the. >> rose: the ensemble. >> but i'm talking about the whole full am crew, there is something so beautiful about all those people working together creating a higher intelligence, intelligence and trying to create poetry together. and to answer to your question i love to build relationship in time and jake is an actor that i am much more better director when i work with jake. >> rose: there you go. again, will you see jake in this scene where he hunts down a suspect played by paul dano. >> where are those girls? where are those girls! hey, give me a flashlight. >> sir. >> show me where thos
. >> in doing enemy, steve mcqueen was here who works with the same actors a number of times. is that something you like to do because he find somebody that somehow represents an you know --. >> i'm trapped. >> get me out of here. >> honestly, the beauty of cinema -- >> no but the butte -- beauty of cinema. >> no, no, i am deeply inspired by that man. and i think jake is a fall tan particular actor, seriously. i love the beauty of the rip in cinemament i love...
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Mar 13, 2013
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listen, steve talked about guys like duane wade or lebron james. he seeing them struggle at times with their confidence. that's something you have to be tough enough to overcome. you can't do it by yourself. that's where your teammates and coaches come in that give you that help you with that confidence of belief. you earn the confidence so when you step to the line you know you've put the work in you've done it a million times. that's when your intense concentration and your routine allows you to be relaxed. >> rose: i'll read the rest of them. communication, persistence, next play, commitment accept shungs and self evaluation. all of things give you toughness. you said recently about ncaa basketball. it is in a crises state. >> i believe that. i believe we're in a lot of trouble and i believe that for a period of years and i've said it before but now with what's going on in the game i think people can really see it even the most casual observers can see it. >> rose: what's going on. >> our product is not very good. the quality of play has deterio
listen, steve talked about guys like duane wade or lebron james. he seeing them struggle at times with their confidence. that's something you have to be tough enough to overcome. you can't do it by yourself. that's where your teammates and coaches come in that give you that help you with that confidence of belief. you earn the confidence so when you step to the line you know you've put the work in you've done it a million times. that's when your intense concentration and your routine allows you...
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steve job knows to stand by their new manager. >> rose: i should say that's a new manager that you chose. >> yes. >> rose: but you left him in a very tough place to be because he's following you. >> yes. >> rose: some would say you don't want to follow the guy who follows alex ferguson you want to follow the guy that follows alex ferguson. let's begin, sitting here at this point before an american television audience. manchester united. tell me about manchester united. >> well, the thing is i think this goes back to the 1950 disaster, sympathy which it was justified because it was a young team going. it could have been a great team. and all the players were 21 years of age. and most of them had a wife. but that was only the start of the story. i think the real story was when the european cup within ten years. i think that created what was that got bigger and bigger and bigger. my first trip out to taiwan in 1988, thousands outside in the corridors knocking on doors. and that love of the club has only grown. >> rose: what accent do i detect in your voice. >> west region. you have some sco
steve job knows to stand by their new manager. >> rose: i should say that's a new manager that you chose. >> yes. >> rose: but you left him in a very tough place to be because he's following you. >> yes. >> rose: some would say you don't want to follow the guy who follows alex ferguson you want to follow the guy that follows alex ferguson. let's begin, sitting here at this point before an american television audience. manchester united. tell me about manchester...
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Nov 5, 2013
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steve israel our chairman is masterful in all of this, and some of the people who said maybe next year, two years from now, next election. >> rose: then came back and said i think that now. and. >> and that makes a big difference because which want to own the ground and mobilize around our message and have all the money to win and have all the proper management of campaigns that steve is a master at but uh if you don't have the candidate it is hard to do and now we do. >> rose: you think it is greater than 50-50 you could win control of the house in 2014? >> i think we can win. let me -- >> rose: let than 50-50? >> oh i think it is probably even money now. >> rose: even money that you will win? >> that we can win, yes, but let me say this. let's say you are off but i say let you know where you are a year in advance because that tells you who the candidates are. it is really important, we won in '06, we knew in '05 we had the team, now the question is, what were the events that would occur and how could we get our message out on all of that. but we feel very good about where we are, and
steve israel our chairman is masterful in all of this, and some of the people who said maybe next year, two years from now, next election. >> rose: then came back and said i think that now. and. >> and that makes a big difference because which want to own the ground and mobilize around our message and have all the money to win and have all the proper management of campaigns that steve is a master at but uh if you don't have the candidate it is hard to do and now we do. >>...
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Aug 22, 2013
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disputar el puesto de senador de nueva jersey, cargo por el competira contra el aspirante republicano steve lonegan en las elecciones especiales del 16 de octubre.... el abuso laboral sigue siendo un problema en estados unidos... organizaciones comunitarias, agencias federales y la red de consulados mexicanos unen sus fuerzas para tratar de combatir este problema. pedro ultreras nos amplÍa tomÓ solo una firma para que el consulado general de me Éxico en nueva york y el departamento del trabajo federal de ee.uu. sellaran un acuerdo de colaboraciÓn para evitar que mÁs mexicanos en el paÍs sean abusados en el trabajo. "es muy importante que nuestros trabajadores sepan que independientemente de su calidad migratoria los derechos laborales serán respetados siempre". el acuerdo se hace en vi Íspera del quinto aÑo de los derechos laborales a realizarse en nueva york y varias ciudades de estados unidos el prÓximo lunes. evento en el que participaran agencias federales y organizaciones comunitarias que buscan disminuir los abusos en el empleo. "el problema es muy grande tenemos muchas llam
disputar el puesto de senador de nueva jersey, cargo por el competira contra el aspirante republicano steve lonegan en las elecciones especiales del 16 de octubre.... el abuso laboral sigue siendo un problema en estados unidos... organizaciones comunitarias, agencias federales y la red de consulados mexicanos unen sus fuerzas para tratar de combatir este problema. pedro ultreras nos amplÍa tomÓ solo una firma para que el consulado general de me Éxico en nueva york y el departamento del...
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. >> in selecting "enemy," steve mcqueen was here, who works with the same actors, is that something you like to do because you find somebody that represents -- [laughter] >> i am trapped. >> the beauty of the cinema [indiscernible] i am deeply inspired by that man. i think jake is a fantastic actor. i love the beauty of the relationship of cinema. working together. i'm talking about there is a been so beautiful love those people working together, creating a higher intelligence and trying to create portraits together. i love to build relationships. jake is an actor that i'm a better director when i work with jake. >> there you go. >> where's oscar? somewhere those girls are. are they in the woods? where did you put those girls? do you hear me? >> he is high or something. >> walk. send the scent dogs. >> what did roger bring to this? >> a lot. >> i was deeply influenced. it was like going back to film school. i had the chance to work with a master. he has a kind of genius. >> are you watching this thinking someday i will direct stuff too, or do you think that far ahead? you seem to be
. >> in selecting "enemy," steve mcqueen was here, who works with the same actors, is that something you like to do because you find somebody that represents -- [laughter] >> i am trapped. >> the beauty of the cinema [indiscernible] i am deeply inspired by that man. i think jake is a fantastic actor. i love the beauty of the relationship of cinema. working together. i'm talking about there is a been so beautiful love those people working together, creating a higher...
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. >> i'm jack nicholson and marlon gran bran doe, jimmy stewart, steve mcqueen. >> i'm nicholas cage and robert pattinson, james dean and rock hudson. >> i am norma shearer and lillian gish. >> i'm garbo. >> i'm like a sophisticated prop. i give you all the feeling you want, all the hair styles and wardrobe changes you want. i'm say whatever you put in front of me. >> do not expect me to take pride in what i do. >> i used to care about how i looked. now i don't care as much. maybe it's because i'm so handsome. >> rose: i am pleased to have james franco back at this table. welcome. >> thank you. >> last time we saw each other was at brown university where you were attending rhode island school of design? >> that's great. that was a great interview. thank you. >> rose: so i just touch on this because you must get tired of talking about it. why so many things? or why not so many things? >> right. good question. um -- i admit i do a lot of things but they're all things i've been interested in as long as i've been interested in acting. basically they all -- you know, i guess -- they all f
. >> i'm jack nicholson and marlon gran bran doe, jimmy stewart, steve mcqueen. >> i'm nicholas cage and robert pattinson, james dean and rock hudson. >> i am norma shearer and lillian gish. >> i'm garbo. >> i'm like a sophisticated prop. i give you all the feeling you want, all the hair styles and wardrobe changes you want. i'm say whatever you put in front of me. >> do not expect me to take pride in what i do. >> i used to care about how i looked. now...
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Feb 9, 2013
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steve brier on your question, is much more hostile to this vision. but i think in the end, if he's hostile to that vision, we're fever going to get gun control because people are going to say well, the first reasonable regulation dow is going to slide all the way into total confiscation. so liberals should actually say fine, guns in homes. now let's talk about-- . >> rose: what exactly does the constitution a? >> well, the framers talked about well regulated militias. >> rose: yes. >> but after the civil war, remember, justice scalia doesn't talk as much as he should about the amendments. the world that we live in is way more lincoln's world than washington's world. and after the civil war,ed thattuous stevens, you know, tommy lee jones we are configure-- reconfigured. they don't like state militias, the founders like state militias, their key party, lincoln's generation believe in the national government. >> rose: fought for it. >> of course, the u.s. grant but they also believe individuals need guns in their homes for self-protection because blacks
steve brier on your question, is much more hostile to this vision. but i think in the end, if he's hostile to that vision, we're fever going to get gun control because people are going to say well, the first reasonable regulation dow is going to slide all the way into total confiscation. so liberals should actually say fine, guns in homes. now let's talk about-- . >> rose: what exactly does the constitution a? >> well, the framers talked about well regulated militias. >> rose:...
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Aug 16, 2013
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we saw apple with steve jobs, we saw apple without steve jobs. we saw apple with steve jobs. now we're going to see apple without steve jobs. >> rose: so you're shorting apple? >> i'm not shorting apple. i like tim cook, there are a lot of talented people. >> rose: you just said apple is going down without steve jobs. that's exactly what you said. apple is going down without steve jobs. >> okay, i'll say it publicly. he's irreplaceable. i don't see how they can -- they will not be nearly so successful because he's gone. you can already feel it, he made all the decisions. he ran everything. he made every single decision. i know he loved to share the credit and that's fine, but i'm telling you, he made every single decision. i was there, i watched it. for 25 years. he made every -- he decided how you -- how you paid -- how you checked out of the apple store. he decided where things were in the apple store. he picked the colors of the original imacs. sorry no beige was his. a thousand songs in your pocket was his. >> rose: (laughs) i hear you. >> the name "ipad, i tunes, iphone"
we saw apple with steve jobs, we saw apple without steve jobs. we saw apple with steve jobs. now we're going to see apple without steve jobs. >> rose: so you're shorting apple? >> i'm not shorting apple. i like tim cook, there are a lot of talented people. >> rose: you just said apple is going down without steve jobs. that's exactly what you said. apple is going down without steve jobs. >> okay, i'll say it publicly. he's irreplaceable. i don't see how they can -- they...
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steve will no longer be involved in this company. >> 10 years after steve jobs' departure, the future of apple computer is in jeopardy. >> in life you only get to do so many things. we're going to make apple cool again. here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels. because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do. >> if we're going to do this thing, we need to come up with a name. >> apple. >> that is so much better than laser beam computers. >> rose: i'm pleased to have ashton kutcher at this table for the first time. welcome. great to have you here. >> thanks for having me. >> rose: we share a passion for film and technol at very different levels. steve jobs, just a sense of who the-- the essence of this man who has been on this show as well, but you've said there are few people when they walk into the room, the room is different than the way it was when steve jobs walked into the room. >> i never had the good fortune of meeting him. but i think there's-- there's this-- this iconic understanding of who steve jobs was, and-- which is
steve will no longer be involved in this company. >> 10 years after steve jobs' departure, the future of apple computer is in jeopardy. >> in life you only get to do so many things. we're going to make apple cool again. here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels. because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do. >> if we're going to do this thing, we need to come up with a name. >> apple. >> that is so much...
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Oct 11, 2013
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as steve well knows. she has a passion for politics and as a policy and i think you'll see her more and more talking about the issues of the day and i think 2014 will be very telling to see what other democrats do. the martin o'malleys, the andrew cuomos. are they going to go forward with their own campaign if they see her out there more and more? >> but there's worry among democrats that she's going to wait too long to decide. she'll be out there talking but they're very worried she's going to try to stay out of technical politics for a long time and that leaves space for a senator elizabeth warren of massachusetts, someone who would be a threat the to get in. >> rose: she's the liberal threat as obama was in 2008. >> i think hillary clinton is going to try to draw a fine line, whether she succeeds or not i can't say and try do her policy stuff more under the guise of the foundation and more outside of washington than getting involved in the mosh pit of what piece of legislation happens to be -- >> rose:
as steve well knows. she has a passion for politics and as a policy and i think you'll see her more and more talking about the issues of the day and i think 2014 will be very telling to see what other democrats do. the martin o'malleys, the andrew cuomos. are they going to go forward with their own campaign if they see her out there more and more? >> but there's worry among democrats that she's going to wait too long to decide. she'll be out there talking but they're very worried she's...